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Chicago examiner Chicago june 8 1910 18 pages wednesday fr iwiaÂ»iaamiiiÂ«Â«imjâ€”'"r -â€” iâ€”t-m.rj-y the weather m hicago and vicinity increas i ing cloudiness wednesday showers w>.l thursday slowly rising tempera h-j ture easterly shifting to southerly iÂ£st winds vol viii no 145 a m wednesday jim financial business wt jv!g real estate and pt v commercial section â€” v / jltt pages 11 to 18 iffl ? registered m d s patent office price one cent 5?%e * y carrla * 30 cents per month state accepts 4 jurors browne denied appeal rearrested mysterious officials friends of defendant see lo rimer and state's attorney scanlan refuses writ pleas for delay are refused by court and new bond for â– 15,000 is given for god's sake slick together was the plea of lee o'neil browne to his at torneys last uight after the four venire men accepted by the state were turned over to the defense for examination the four uicd so far accepted to try the alleged giver of bribes to elect william lorimer to the united states senate are jacob p frank 5824 la salle street fred strouisen 1409 x artesian avenue monroe e walters 842 e eighty-eighth place theodo-e anderson 944 x waller street it was evidenced by the questions put to the prospective jurymen that the state would not accept any members of ward clubs or men who had any familiarity with politics or political organizations state's attorney wayman accepted one man who stated that he had already made up his mind as to the guilt or innocence of lee o'xeil browne it is doubtful if he defense will accept this juryman al though he did not state whether he-be lieved browne guilty or innocent the man was fred stromsen another venireman who was rejected stated that he was m doubt as to whether or not he could give browne a fair trial on a charge of bribery according to the charges m the indictment down-state officials appear two mysterious down state officials played a part m the browne trial yester day they were states attorney cullen and county clerk mckinney of la salle co.unty tbey attended the investigation | of the venircmeu and when judge mc i surely excused the men who are to be . examined for jury service until this morn ing at 10 a m browne greeted the two officials and introduced them to attorney charles krbstein his attorney ns'jfriends the men left browne and visited the state's attorney's offlce after leaving the criminal court building they went to the lorimer bank lorimer was m his private office the men later took a train for la salle the courtroom of judge mcsurely was crowded to capacity during the investiga tion of veniremen attorneys william for rest and r h o'donnell frequently ob jected to questions put to the men being examined at 10 o'clock yesterday judge scanian refused to issue a writ of habeas corpus to browne and attorneys for browne im mediately made an application for au ap peal judge scanian took this under ad visement thu.s dclayiug the criminal pro ceedings until 2 o'clock when he denied the application browne's arrest ordered during the time between judge scanlan's denial of the writ and the denial of the application for the appeal judge mcsurely became irritated at the delay of proceed ings and issued a capias for the arrest of browne who was fouud m the office of elbridge haneey . l'non being brought into court by the deputy sheriff browne surprised the spec tators by acting as his own attorney nnif informing judge mcsurely that he could not so on with the trial until after judge scanian had denied him a writ of appeal to the federal court at 10:15 a m judge mcsurely forfeited browne's bonds of 15,000 and ordered the capias served judge scanian m denying the writ of habeas corpus went iuto the question of whether or not the state senator's char acter was changed to lhat of a federal offi cial when he voted for the united states senator he decided that it was uot during the afternoon attorney forrest for news of finance real estate commerce and business see pages 11 to 18 contents to-day fa b e li boersiauer on bargain day western suburbs offer home mies rase 12 city railway shows increase . i loans on land checked i Chicago storks kise m sympathy i bulls show power m cotton market financial causerie â€” street's shops busy â€¢ sew york exchange transaction ji'ew yofk bond list boston copper market rage 13 â€” ' alaska mines show big output actuaries smooth way for xciv members new orcat western freight director pare 1 1 knox hankow loan aids i . com merce competitors handicap steel trust c Â« a piles sib,tmkÂ»,wm mortgage kills self in theater box as girl's song ends widow of new york suicide refuses to believe husband was m love with member of company mow york june 7 a well-dressed man of middle age supposed to be charles talbert rose iv a box at the columbia theater to-night just before the close of the performance and a**er listening to a song by miss fanny vedder a member of the jersey lillie burlesque company slowly pulied a revolver from his pocket and shot himeslf m the right temple he died later as the report sounded through the crowd ed theater every one looked toward the box and saw the man fall forward strike | his hnnds against the railing and drop tol the floor the audience became excited j but their attention was partly diverted by tho orchestra which began playing na 1 tional airs some of those seated nearest j to the box rushed to it ond assisted em 1 ploycs of the theater to lift the stricken man he was slili conscious and some one asked who shot you there was no reply the man only smiled faintly and pointed toward the re volver when a doctor reached the box the man was pronounced dead letters | found m his pockets led to his identifica tiou as charles talbert of 367 park avenue mrs lena talbert when called on the telephone said her husband had been m ill health i don't think he was m love with any member of the jersey lillie company said mrs talbert i think his health and financial troubles caused his act wife in want sues a g wheeler jr mrs claudia t.wheeler i ex-chicago millionaire is ac | cused of trying to drive spouse out without means borrows from servants goods seized she sleeps on cot asks 20,000 alimony from the banker __ new york june 7 ln one of the city's most expensive apartments stripped or 20.Â«80 worth of furnishings mrs claudia t wheeler wife of a millionaire banter informed thedtopremo court to-day that she had beerfjspins with only a tot two chairs and n table borrowed from the ser vantsâ€”for aeeominodatious this statement of the condition iv which her husband albert g wheeler jr a for mer chlcagoau left her at the time when he took up separate apartments is con tained m mrs wheeler's affidavits submit ted m connection with her plea for 20,000 a year alimony pending trial of her action for separation although mr wheler is alleged by his wife to have an income of oyer juo.ooo a year he contended that his financial condi tion is such that he cannot afford to pay mrs wheeler more than 10 a week justice mccall however signed au order granting mrs wheeler alimony of 10,000 a yea refuses 40 a week the papers that are ou file show lhat the power cf ibe law was invoked m the wheel ing household only after several lawyers had conferred upon the best way to ar range a private separation agreement the plan fell through and ou april i'g the millionaire banker informed his wife that he would ailow her 40 each week she sent the cheeks back and appealed to the court for an allowance m proportion to their style of living which cost as high she claims as 60,000 a year albert gallatin wheeler jr is a member of the new york stock exchange the union i.etague club of Chicago and the new york athletic club the calumet club of Chicago and is n director m many big corporations his wife whom he married iv 1898 when she was twenty-one was formerly miss claudia carlstedt she is the daughter of i the former director of the boston con jsetvatory of music lhe institution hi which | she received n musical education that made j her a favorite on the comic opera stage | her first marriage was contracted iv chi i cago when she was sixteen years old left alone wife swoons my husband left me without the slighl st cause or reason mrs wheeler charges and when i realized his departure was a ettled fact i swooned away and became ncouscious if it had not been for the care of a maid servant 1 doubt if i would i nve recovered from the low physical con si ion for several months to come since ray husband deserted me i have written him two imploring letters asking liim to come back and live with me but he has not answered either on april 25 last he had the sheriff remove all the furniture leaving not even a tied for me i to sleep on and notified the manager not j lo give me food and informed me that if t didn't set out i would be put out since i have slept on a cot obtained from the servants quarters *. mrs wheeler said their Chicago home is at 4635 ellis avenue earthquake shakes italy many dead calitri l-s partially destroyed and other towns m avellino province suffer king to aid homeless inhabitants are caught while sleeping and are buried m ruins of buildings special cable to the examiner london june 7 lt is impossible to give the number of lives lost by the earthquake south and east of naples m the provinces of campania and avellino m southern italy hope is entertained that the number will not exceed 100 the shocks were principally felt at naples i poteiign calitri beuevento and foggin calitri suffered the most the houses i are built iv n kind of large amphitheater j on each side of a hill the shocks brought | them down crashing upon one another the ] huge mass of debris sliding to the bottom j of the slope in this mound of wreckage ] search is now being made for the dead and wounded late to-night eighteen bodies and numerous wounded persons had been extricated ' american missionaries visiting calilri considered by some superstitious fanatics to be responsible for the disaster were at tacked by villagers and rescued by sol diers it is feared the number of dead at avellino will number fifty the popula-j tiou is living m the open air two shocks felt at naples naples june 7 ia few minutes past 3 o'clock this morning the people of naples were aroused by two distinct uudulatory shocks which lasted titteeu seconds seized with pauic the people rushed into the streets m their night attire many knock ing at doors and shouting earthquake earthquake fly save yourselves the streets of the densely populated toledo quarter were thronged with half clad men and women carrying babies all seemed mad with terror around the foot of vesuvius the populace of the coast towns were terrified fpon receiving word of the suffering king victor emmanuel and queen helena left for the scene on a special train and soldiers and medical corps were dispatched to render aid it was announced that the government had called on parliament for an appropriation of sioo.qoo soldiers aid injured at chinnchc a house fell burying and killing au aged man one person was killed ant several were injured at caste baronia calabritto suffered severely squads of workmeu and detachments of soldiers were sent from this place to as sist the suffering villagers five persons were kiiled m the tillage of san sele province of potenza m the compartment of basilicata every house iv the village was damaged slight shocks continued m the district this afternoon the minister of public works has left ; for the scene of the earth shocks he is j accompanied by the officials of his depart ment the pope was notified by the bishop of avellino of the suffering m that province and at once sent funds for relief and a message saying that his prayers would be with the sufferers roosevelt shows inconsistency of a time-server ' i by william randolph hears former president m speech repudiates fundamental american principle says william randolph hearst explanation of what he meant is evasive record as a corporation foe m public while soliciting contributions from them m private is exemplified i pjune â€” roosevelt'sÃŸ the opinionÃŸ hisÃŸ uu<il'-m ances to heÃŸ substitutingÃŸ lie hoi to earopeansÃŸ his asÃŸ heÃŸ to slur the se'nti-h a peoplem struggling for liberty by calling that sentiment sentimentality what mr roosevelt meant as the anti thesis of such sentiment or sentimentality was just what he said m so many spoken and printed words â€¢ he said at the guildhall sentimentality will do more harm than violence obviously then mr roosevelt said and meant that an titheses of sentimentality were violence and injustice and that violence and injustice were preferable to sentimentality â€¢ statement of kindergarten simplicity the statement is of kindergarten simplicity and is impossible of misconstruction or misrepresentation the statement was meant to be and possibly may be agreeable to that portion of the english people who are anxious to find some plausible moral or political excuse for their occupation and domination of egypt the statement is not however sympathetically received by ameri cans who believe m liberty and who but lately went to war to free cuba from the violence and injustice of spain in that war mr roosevelt played a noisy although unimportant par md his present attitude therefore would be unimportant except for the fact that the man's whole career is an example of time-serving inconsistency of words at vari ance with his acts and acts at variance with his words no great consistency can be expected of the singularly inconsistent man wito publicly denounced harriman at the very time he was invit ing harriman m private letters to come to washington and review his presidential message speech more important than man but roosevelt's speech is more important than roosevelt if it were not it would hardly be worthy of discussion at all roosevelt's speech is a declaration m favor of imperialism m favor of greater force and repression m england's governmental methods is a direct and ex pressed advocacy of a subject state by a foreign power it is an argument for government not only without representation but for government without the consent of the governed â€” a plea even for government by force m defiance of sentiment it is a rÂ»pudiaÂ»ittn not only of the principles of republicanism generally bat of tfte ftfrnftt niental principles of our american republic particularly and specifically it is a definite denial of the declara tions of washington and jefferson and lincoln and of every great demo cratic or republican american statesman it is an insult to the followers of o'connell of rousseau of mazzini of kossuth and kosciusko who have gone to america to find m that land of liberty the realization of their ideals it is an assertion that american ideas of a free and independent government are wrong and that european ideas of arbitrary rule and foreign domination are right , . direct advocacy of more imperialism it is more than all of this it is a direct advocacy of more imperial ism and more force and more repression m dealing with a subject peo ple than even england the special exponent of imperialism has been exercising over her conquered territories the importance of roosevelt's utterance is not unfortunately de pendent upon the unimportance of the man but upon european mis conception of the importance of the man roosevelt's literary bureau has busily spread the report that roosevelt is to be the perpetual president of the united states and that Taft is merely holding the presidency for him until he comes home to take it again \ roosevelt is constantly referred to m the papers which receive the roosevelt press service as the diaz of the united states and recently a certain diplomat of consequence and of apparent sanity m other mat ters told me that he had been informed that the constitution of the united states would be so changed as to allow roosevelt to continue indefinitely m office these europeans know but little of the united states and the roosevelt literary bureau has taÃŸen advantage of that fact to make them know less many of the wealthiest and most influential men abroad are nobles dependent upon the favors of monarchies and empires and they are convinced through their associations of the superiority of personal government and an imperialistic policy america an argument against despotism america the great republic of the world vis the most prosperous and most powerful nation m the world to-day that fact is a standing and convincing argument against despotism against an imperialistic policy europe therefore is pleased to hear roosevelt approve of im perialism and urge even greater and severer imperialism europe is pleased to hope that america is abandoning its democracy its ideas of liberty and equality its policy of opportunity for all nen the misconception of roosevelt's importance and position is due as i say to the activity of his literary bureau which mai;es this speech of his seem almost an authoritative announcement of the abandonment by america of it historic police w m america know roosevelt and know better we have often gone out o see this particular reed shaken by the wind we have cotne back amused if not edified we are familiar witn riosevelt's whole skyrocket career from police commissioner to prttedent and down again we know the tacts of his promenade up kcflk hill not san juan william randolph hearst deal on to aid trowbridge and niver and save irrigation co henry l doherty of new york heads 1,250,000 relief plans for Chicago house and the colorado concern i . i books of local firm to be 1 examined before capital is advanced negotiations may be completed to-day _ hundreds of thousands due banks . here coloradoans fear heavy blow to state unless crash is averted a 1,250,000 deal planned for the purposa of saving the denver reservoir irrigation conipauy which on monday was , thrown into the hands of a receiver iv colorado and for furnishing additional working cap ital for the trowbridge & niver company irrigation bond dealers m Chicago may lie consummated here to-day if the deal should go through without objection on the part of the Chicago banks ' or other interests to which hundreds of thousands of dollars are due it will irtean the salvation of the colorado company and â– relieve from embarrassment the trow bridge & niver company which bus elan orate offices on the fourth floor of tha first national bank building the bond concern is charged by attor ney milton smith counsel far the irriga tion company with failure to carry out it contract for marketing securities and thus bringuj about the conditions which caused the application for a receiver th new money will not be advanced to save the irrigation company until the books of trowbridge & niver have been care fully examined doherty heads relief syndicate colorado capitalists announce their readi uess to put op securities for the payment of the debts of the embnrassed concern included m the same deal is the plan to supply ready money for the trowbridge & niver company the leader of the re lief syndicate is henry l doherty of new yorjv of the banking firm of henry u dotferty & co and associated with him m the move are governor john f shufroth of colorado governor j h brady of idaho and mayor robert speer of jjenver they have hurried to the aid of the em barrassed company because the baiikmptcy of the corporation would mean the loss of millions of dollars to other development projects of the state through awakening the distrust of investors t ' mr doherty and frank freuauff vie president of h(9 bank have been m Chicago for several daÂ£s attending to the preilu)l naries of the deal the negotiations start ed before the denver reservoir irrigation company was thrown into a receivership and had for their first aim plans for taking care of the obligations of the trowbridgi &. niver company at the banks 1,500,000 due Chicago banks the bond house is indebted to a numbar of banks m Chicago and other cities and owes 1,500,000 to four banks m this city the syndicate offers to put up securities of solvent irrigation concerns to the amount of approximately 1,250,000 this '. amount besides paying the more pressing ! obligations of the denver company would j leave a surplus for the use of trowbridge ; ft niver toward which the colorado irriga tion interests are friendly y the banks will be expected to furnish money on the irrigation securities which the syndicate will furnish as collateral whether or not they will do so it is ex pected will be decided to-day the banks have been watching the trowbridge & niver accounts closely for the past few weeks after la salle street learned that the company was indebted 526,000 to the first national bank alone the conti nental national bank also is a creditor of the bond concern and hr.s ieen taking part iv the negotiations with the colo rado syndicate declare loans amply secured banking officials declare the loans to trowbridge & niver are ampjy secured by bonds of municipalities water nowe /â€ž uj panics street railroads and irrigation pro jects the colorado syndicate is interested m assisting the bond concern ir i said n good authority because of the ooslrion of that honse m the market for irrigation se curities and because the synd;<-.me d the aid of trowbridge & nivc is floating 15,000,000 of bonds on new irrigation pro jects yet to be financed conditions m the bond iÃŸprkel oa ve been unsatisfactory for some weeks said a banking official yesterday md s.,nic bond dealers have had trouble m finding a ready sale for securities which thÂ«y liav underwritten tie consequence has been that their working capital has been mi paired some wealthy friends of the trow bridge & niver company at its own re quest have been looking into its affair^fl with a view to putting money into its b<m ness mml these negotiations have been va ton the last few dajs and a decisjjfl expected to-morrow ehe l i^h 9 - inpnny are so well secured mm it is safe to say that the ' ama | wggjl^e sad lo a-sume â– mm \\ continued on 4th page 3d column continued an 2d patje 2d in^t i+4=s exclusive of country sales and wholly m Chicago and immediate environs 162,185 was the average number of Chicago daily examiners sold during may 1910 of which over 100,000 were delivered by carriers into homes 272,463 was the average number of Chicago sunday examiners sold during may 1910 of which over 90 went into homes the late marshall field the world's prince of merchants said m effect â€” ' ' i'd sooner advertise m one newspaper delivered into the homes than twenty sold on the street , it is estimated that there is an average of five persons to a family â€” thus a consuming power of 5 to iâ€”five1 â€” five times as much food clothing books furniture fixings luxuries etc etc than the individual requires â– the tremendous power of the Chicago examiner daily and sunday is due to its home and family cir culation â€” it's the epitome of mr field s expressed preference * sworn statement of the daily and sunday circulation of the ci-hcago examiner m the city of Chicago and its immediate environs exclusive of country circulation for may 1910 i Â» daily sunday daily ' sunday / 268,753 17 160,80j 2 150,884 18 164,093 3 * 155,383 19 171,468 4 157,172 20 170,183 5 158,621 21 167,894 6 158,367 22 273,534 7 188,495 23 159,528 8 271,604 24 166,351 ' 9 159,264 25 166,487 10 160,745 26 166,894 , 11 160,019 27 166,137 12 160,295 28 166,613 13 159,663 29 273,929 14 161,084 30 128,807 15 274,496 31 . 170,703 16 160,861 total 4,216,814 1~362,316 average daily city circulation may 1910 ' 162,185 average sunday city circulation may 1910 '.. .' 272,463 w s mac donald being duly sworn deposes and says that he is the circulation manager of the Chicago examiner and that the above figures are true and that the city circulation of the daily and sunday examiner as stated above is net paid jtf i.vlwkovuju Â£&%& subscribed and sworr to before me t â– r fi%r r Â» r *' v this 2d day of june 1910 yy notary //

Chicago examiner Chicago june 8 1910 18 pages wednesday fr iwiaÂ»iaamiiiÂ«Â«imjâ€”'"r -â€” iâ€”t-m.rj-y the weather m hicago and vicinity increas i ing cloudiness wednesday showers w>.l thursday slowly rising tempera h-j ture easterly shifting to southerly iÂ£st winds vol viii no 145 a m wednesday jim financial business wt jv!g real estate and pt v commercial section â€” v / jltt pages 11 to 18 iffl ? registered m d s patent office price one cent 5?%e * y carrla * 30 cents per month state accepts 4 jurors browne denied appeal rearrested mysterious officials friends of defendant see lo rimer and state's attorney scanlan refuses writ pleas for delay are refused by court and new bond for â– 15,000 is given for god's sake slick together was the plea of lee o'neil browne to his at torneys last uight after the four venire men accepted by the state were turned over to the defense for examination the four uicd so far accepted to try the alleged giver of bribes to elect william lorimer to the united states senate are jacob p frank 5824 la salle street fred strouisen 1409 x artesian avenue monroe e walters 842 e eighty-eighth place theodo-e anderson 944 x waller street it was evidenced by the questions put to the prospective jurymen that the state would not accept any members of ward clubs or men who had any familiarity with politics or political organizations state's attorney wayman accepted one man who stated that he had already made up his mind as to the guilt or innocence of lee o'xeil browne it is doubtful if he defense will accept this juryman al though he did not state whether he-be lieved browne guilty or innocent the man was fred stromsen another venireman who was rejected stated that he was m doubt as to whether or not he could give browne a fair trial on a charge of bribery according to the charges m the indictment down-state officials appear two mysterious down state officials played a part m the browne trial yester day they were states attorney cullen and county clerk mckinney of la salle co.unty tbey attended the investigation | of the venircmeu and when judge mc i surely excused the men who are to be . examined for jury service until this morn ing at 10 a m browne greeted the two officials and introduced them to attorney charles krbstein his attorney ns'jfriends the men left browne and visited the state's attorney's offlce after leaving the criminal court building they went to the lorimer bank lorimer was m his private office the men later took a train for la salle the courtroom of judge mcsurely was crowded to capacity during the investiga tion of veniremen attorneys william for rest and r h o'donnell frequently ob jected to questions put to the men being examined at 10 o'clock yesterday judge scanian refused to issue a writ of habeas corpus to browne and attorneys for browne im mediately made an application for au ap peal judge scanian took this under ad visement thu.s dclayiug the criminal pro ceedings until 2 o'clock when he denied the application browne's arrest ordered during the time between judge scanlan's denial of the writ and the denial of the application for the appeal judge mcsurely became irritated at the delay of proceed ings and issued a capias for the arrest of browne who was fouud m the office of elbridge haneey . l'non being brought into court by the deputy sheriff browne surprised the spec tators by acting as his own attorney nnif informing judge mcsurely that he could not so on with the trial until after judge scanian had denied him a writ of appeal to the federal court at 10:15 a m judge mcsurely forfeited browne's bonds of 15,000 and ordered the capias served judge scanian m denying the writ of habeas corpus went iuto the question of whether or not the state senator's char acter was changed to lhat of a federal offi cial when he voted for the united states senator he decided that it was uot during the afternoon attorney forrest for news of finance real estate commerce and business see pages 11 to 18 contents to-day fa b e li boersiauer on bargain day western suburbs offer home mies rase 12 city railway shows increase . i loans on land checked i Chicago storks kise m sympathy i bulls show power m cotton market financial causerie â€” street's shops busy â€¢ sew york exchange transaction ji'ew yofk bond list boston copper market rage 13 â€” ' alaska mines show big output actuaries smooth way for xciv members new orcat western freight director pare 1 1 knox hankow loan aids i . com merce competitors handicap steel trust c Â« a piles sib,tmkÂ»,wm mortgage kills self in theater box as girl's song ends widow of new york suicide refuses to believe husband was m love with member of company mow york june 7 a well-dressed man of middle age supposed to be charles talbert rose iv a box at the columbia theater to-night just before the close of the performance and a**er listening to a song by miss fanny vedder a member of the jersey lillie burlesque company slowly pulied a revolver from his pocket and shot himeslf m the right temple he died later as the report sounded through the crowd ed theater every one looked toward the box and saw the man fall forward strike | his hnnds against the railing and drop tol the floor the audience became excited j but their attention was partly diverted by tho orchestra which began playing na 1 tional airs some of those seated nearest j to the box rushed to it ond assisted em 1 ploycs of the theater to lift the stricken man he was slili conscious and some one asked who shot you there was no reply the man only smiled faintly and pointed toward the re volver when a doctor reached the box the man was pronounced dead letters | found m his pockets led to his identifica tiou as charles talbert of 367 park avenue mrs lena talbert when called on the telephone said her husband had been m ill health i don't think he was m love with any member of the jersey lillie company said mrs talbert i think his health and financial troubles caused his act wife in want sues a g wheeler jr mrs claudia t.wheeler i ex-chicago millionaire is ac | cused of trying to drive spouse out without means borrows from servants goods seized she sleeps on cot asks 20,000 alimony from the banker __ new york june 7 ln one of the city's most expensive apartments stripped or 20.Â«80 worth of furnishings mrs claudia t wheeler wife of a millionaire banter informed thedtopremo court to-day that she had beerfjspins with only a tot two chairs and n table borrowed from the ser vantsâ€”for aeeominodatious this statement of the condition iv which her husband albert g wheeler jr a for mer chlcagoau left her at the time when he took up separate apartments is con tained m mrs wheeler's affidavits submit ted m connection with her plea for 20,000 a year alimony pending trial of her action for separation although mr wheler is alleged by his wife to have an income of oyer juo.ooo a year he contended that his financial condi tion is such that he cannot afford to pay mrs wheeler more than 10 a week justice mccall however signed au order granting mrs wheeler alimony of 10,000 a yea refuses 40 a week the papers that are ou file show lhat the power cf ibe law was invoked m the wheel ing household only after several lawyers had conferred upon the best way to ar range a private separation agreement the plan fell through and ou april i'g the millionaire banker informed his wife that he would ailow her 40 each week she sent the cheeks back and appealed to the court for an allowance m proportion to their style of living which cost as high she claims as 60,000 a year albert gallatin wheeler jr is a member of the new york stock exchange the union i.etague club of Chicago and the new york athletic club the calumet club of Chicago and is n director m many big corporations his wife whom he married iv 1898 when she was twenty-one was formerly miss claudia carlstedt she is the daughter of i the former director of the boston con jsetvatory of music lhe institution hi which | she received n musical education that made j her a favorite on the comic opera stage | her first marriage was contracted iv chi i cago when she was sixteen years old left alone wife swoons my husband left me without the slighl st cause or reason mrs wheeler charges and when i realized his departure was a ettled fact i swooned away and became ncouscious if it had not been for the care of a maid servant 1 doubt if i would i nve recovered from the low physical con si ion for several months to come since ray husband deserted me i have written him two imploring letters asking liim to come back and live with me but he has not answered either on april 25 last he had the sheriff remove all the furniture leaving not even a tied for me i to sleep on and notified the manager not j lo give me food and informed me that if t didn't set out i would be put out since i have slept on a cot obtained from the servants quarters *. mrs wheeler said their Chicago home is at 4635 ellis avenue earthquake shakes italy many dead calitri l-s partially destroyed and other towns m avellino province suffer king to aid homeless inhabitants are caught while sleeping and are buried m ruins of buildings special cable to the examiner london june 7 lt is impossible to give the number of lives lost by the earthquake south and east of naples m the provinces of campania and avellino m southern italy hope is entertained that the number will not exceed 100 the shocks were principally felt at naples i poteiign calitri beuevento and foggin calitri suffered the most the houses i are built iv n kind of large amphitheater j on each side of a hill the shocks brought | them down crashing upon one another the ] huge mass of debris sliding to the bottom j of the slope in this mound of wreckage ] search is now being made for the dead and wounded late to-night eighteen bodies and numerous wounded persons had been extricated ' american missionaries visiting calilri considered by some superstitious fanatics to be responsible for the disaster were at tacked by villagers and rescued by sol diers it is feared the number of dead at avellino will number fifty the popula-j tiou is living m the open air two shocks felt at naples naples june 7 ia few minutes past 3 o'clock this morning the people of naples were aroused by two distinct uudulatory shocks which lasted titteeu seconds seized with pauic the people rushed into the streets m their night attire many knock ing at doors and shouting earthquake earthquake fly save yourselves the streets of the densely populated toledo quarter were thronged with half clad men and women carrying babies all seemed mad with terror around the foot of vesuvius the populace of the coast towns were terrified fpon receiving word of the suffering king victor emmanuel and queen helena left for the scene on a special train and soldiers and medical corps were dispatched to render aid it was announced that the government had called on parliament for an appropriation of sioo.qoo soldiers aid injured at chinnchc a house fell burying and killing au aged man one person was killed ant several were injured at caste baronia calabritto suffered severely squads of workmeu and detachments of soldiers were sent from this place to as sist the suffering villagers five persons were kiiled m the tillage of san sele province of potenza m the compartment of basilicata every house iv the village was damaged slight shocks continued m the district this afternoon the minister of public works has left ; for the scene of the earth shocks he is j accompanied by the officials of his depart ment the pope was notified by the bishop of avellino of the suffering m that province and at once sent funds for relief and a message saying that his prayers would be with the sufferers roosevelt shows inconsistency of a time-server ' i by william randolph hears former president m speech repudiates fundamental american principle says william randolph hearst explanation of what he meant is evasive record as a corporation foe m public while soliciting contributions from them m private is exemplified i pjune â€” roosevelt'sÃŸ the opinionÃŸ hisÃŸ uu